"The FBI is executing court-authorized search warrants in an ongoing investigation," said Richard Kolko, an FBI spokesman, who declined to comment further. Diamondback and Level Global confirmed the raids and said they were cooperating with the investigation. A lawyer for Loch Capital, Leonard Pierce, declined to comment.

Level Global and Diamondback are both run by former managers of Steve Cohen's giant SAC Capital Advisors hedge fund. A spokesman for SAC, which wasn't raided, declined to comment.

The raids, first reported on The Wall Street Journal's website, underscore the potential breadth of the investigation, which is being conducted by the FBI, the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office and the Securities and Exchange Commission. More raids are likely in the next few days, according to people familiar with the matter.

The raids helped push the Dow Jones Industrial Average down about 150 points before a rally left the index down 24.97 points. Financial stocks were hit, with Goldman Sachs Group Inc. down 3.4% following news that investigators also were examining whether Goldman bankers had leaked information about deals. Goldman declined to comment.

The action Monday follows disclosure of the investigation by the Journal on Friday night. Authorities are worried about the potential for possible subjects of the overall probe to flee or destroy documents, say people familiar with the matter. Representatives of the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office, FBI and SEC declined to comment.

The Journal reported that federal authorities are preparing insider-trading charges that could ensnare consultants, investment bankers, hedge-fund and mutual-fund traders and analysts across the U.S., and that some charges could be brought by year-end.

A Diamondback spokesman said the firm "is fully operational" and continues "to manage the portfolio and Diamondback's business for the benefit of our investors."

At Level Global, roughly two dozen agents staged the raid, according to a person familiar with the matter. A Level Global spokesman said it is "fully operational" and continues "to work diligently for the benefit of our investors."

In the wake of recent FBI raids at several hedge funds, Alan Murray sat down with Joel Cohen, a former federal prosecutor and insider trading expert, to examine the complicated, and often grey world of insider trading law and prosecutions.

The broad investigation illustrates how law-enforcement agencies are using an increasingly wide range of tools to pursue alleged insider-trading rings. Insider trading has been difficult to prove to juries, since law-enforcement agencies need to demonstrate the intent to defraud.

Some aspects of the current probe could be particularly difficult to prove, if charges are brought. Some legal specialists say authorities appear to be seeking to criminalize typical market behavior, such as hedge funds vying to gain an edge by gathering intelligence on a company from a wide range of sources.

The issue is blurry because insider trading isn't defined by statute. The dividing line between criminal and legitimate behavior has evolved in cases stretching back decades, as courts interpreted the antifraud provisions of securities laws enacted after the 1929 stock-market crash.

Level Global, based in Greenwich, Conn., is run by David Ganek, a former SAC Capital trader, and manages about $4 billion. Diamondback Capital, in Stamford, Conn., oversees more than $5 billion in assets.

Loch Capital, based in Boston, had $750 million in assets at the start of this year, according to SEC filings. The firm, run by brothers Timothy and Todd McSweeney, didn't return messages seeking comment.

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There appear to be ties among some of the players being investigated. Level Global partner Anthony Chiasson is a former client of John Kinnucan, a Portland, Ore., analyst who was visited by FBI agents last month. Mr. Kinnucan said Monday that Level Global cancelled Mr. Chiasson's subscription to his service in August because the firm was not happy with the product.

People close to the situation say Mr. Chiasson also was an associate of former Galleon Group fund manager Todd Deutsch, whose activities the Journal has reported are being examined. Galleon was ensnared in an insider-trading case last year that has generated 14 guilty pleas. Mr. Chiasson didn't respond to requests for comment.

Mr. Deutsch, who received a subpoena last fall, and Mr. Chiasson spoke frequently and exchanged stock ideas, people close to the matter say. Mr. Deutsch's lawyer declined to comment.

Another hedge fund whose activities are being examined is Chicago-based Balyasny Asset Management LP, the people familiar with the matter say. Balyasny, which reported $1.8 billion in assets under management at midyear, didn't respond to requests for comment.

A criminal complaint against a cooperating witness in the Galleon case, hedge-fund manager Steven Fortuna, said that a Boston trader provided him with nonpublic information about a data-storage hardware firm that people familiar with the matter say is EMC Corp.

The individual referred to in that complaint is former Balyasny analyst Mark Adams, who once worked at the fund's Boston office, these people say. Mr. Adams, who also had worked as an SAC analyst, didn't return calls for comment. Mr. Fortuna declined to comment.

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